The Penumbra Center for Racial Healing announced Monday that president and CEO Sarah Bellamy is taking a leave of absence in the wake of her family’s lawsuit against Hennepin County jail and Hennepin Healthcare alleging the wrongful death of her brother.
The development comes a week after the family announced the federal lawsuit and showed video footage of the last minutes of Lucas Bellamy’s life.
A scion of the prominent Twin Cities arts family and a former actor and company manager at Penumbra Theatre, Lucas Bellamy died July 21, 2022, at the Hennepin County jail from a perforated bowel. He had long struggled with addiction and was taken into custody on July 18.
The family’s troubles would be compounded six months later when actor and dramaturge Terry Bellamy, Lucas’ uncle and brother of Penumbra Theatre founder Lou Bellamy, died of complications from COVID-19 in January 2023.
“I feel like the work that I do at Penumbra is soul work, and my soul is very weary right now,” Sarah told the Star Tribune tearfully, adding that she needs time and space to restore her own spirit. “There is so much darkness running around right now, I feel like I need to lift myself out of it the best way I can.”
Although temporary, the step away from leadership marks the first time in 48 years — since the company’s 1976 founding — that a Bellamy will not be running day-to-day operations at the company. Lou built Penumbra into a national powerhouse that gave two-time Pulitzer winner August Wilson his first production and that minted talented theater artists who would go on to work on Broadway and across the country.
Since taking over leadership from her father in 2017, Sarah has expanded Penumbra’s mission beyond performing arts to include practices in racial healing and equity. Amy Thomas, the chief operating officer who has been Sarah’s partner and right hand for her entire tenure, will step in to hold the reins.
“I feel for the Bellamys for the whirlwind of loss they’ve had to endure in the last 18 months,” Thomas said. “It’s hard to watch them bear so much grief.”